breakfast: eggs (the kind that looked like they came out of a real chicken), ham, and grits with real butter. He never let me call him "Mr. McCoy," insisting on just "Houston" instead. He wore a blue western shirt and brown polyester pants. I do not know why, but I knew they were his best clothes. Immediately, he began to talk.
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"I don't want any money. I just want my grandchildren to know the truth," McCoy said as he was explaining that we needed to go to the home of his friends, Hugh Bob and Mary Lee, to continue the interview. We arrived at the lovely home at 9:00 A.M. and got comfortable at the dining room table. While I hooked up the tape recorder McCoy excused himself and went to the kitchen. I could see him moving things in a cabinet. McCoy was clearly at ease at Hugh Bob's house. He returned with a nearly-full liter of whiskey and an empty eight-ounce glass. Pouring a considerable amount of warm brew into the glass, he closed his eyes, took a sip, and said, "Okay, what do you want to know?"
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He sipped straight whiskey for the rest of the morning. I studied him carefully for nearly four hours and I never saw even the beginnings of intoxication. Some of my sources documented McCoy's problems over the years. He had admitted in 1991 that he was an alcoholic; he admitted it again in 1995. But on this day McCoy was ready and able to talk. Because of his tragic past, and the bottle before me, I baited him with questions I already knew the answers to. His responses were flawless. Hell, he even corrected me on some elements of the story. Mary Lee beams, "You sound so good today."
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"I'm a pilot and I got to talk in directions," McCoy said as he explained the events of 1 August 1966 by pointing to a map of the University of Texas campus. Once he located north he began. Again, he was flawless. When he got to the part where he and Martinez shot Charles Whitman, he left the dining room chair, sat on the floor with his back against the fireplace, and re-enacted the position Whitman took on the northwest corner of the deck. He turned his head to the left and eyeballed me, just as Whitman had done to him twenty-eight years earlier, and McCoy's head snapped back as he told the story, only to return and snap back again. I did not know what the hell to do.
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A chill filled the silent room. McCoy was no longer in Hugh Bob's house. He was on that deck, killing Charles Whitman again. I
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